bylerlumax picnic double date (summer of â94)
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bylerlumax picnic double date (summer of â94)
happy valentines day!

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the good place has crossed my dash and I just thought of a really funny au of conformitygate where Mike keeps on figuring out something is wrong and Vecna just keeps crashing out and resetting the timeline.
I wish I was just a casual viewer. I wish I didnât engage with the fandom so often. I wish I didnât over analyze and nitpick every character, plot line, and production of the show. I wish I didnât know more than I should about what goes on behind the scenes. I wish I wasnât so invested in the ship culture. I wish I just liked Mike and El together. I wish I didnât question. I wish I didnât feel so emotionally impacted. I wish I was easily satisfied. Maybe then I wouldnât feel obnoxious every time I end up going on tangent about it. Maybe then I wouldnât get so angry about othersâ polarizing opinions. Maybe then I wouldnât feel dramatic for caring too much about something thatâs just âfictionâ. Maybe then I wouldnât feel crazy delusional for having hope in something everyone else never cared about. Maybe then I wouldnât feel so stupid for continuing to obsess even while acknowledging that it makes me feel all of these things.
Thoughts from a byler.
Worst fear: being stuck still obsessed and fixated on stranger things even after everyoneâs moved on. I already get looked at crazy for caring too much about this show and making it too âdeepâ now like release meeeee I wanna move on too but my brain wonât let me đŤ
me if i hear the name tammy one more goddamn time

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Mike is the leader, Dustin is the brains, Lucas is the heart, and Will is the glue.
This is my final verdict on the core 4 argue with the wall.
He got that boy wrapped around his finger
Tisk tisk same guilty ahh face and all
Iâve been seeing people still argue that el was wrong for telling Mike he doesnât understand her situation in Lenora because she knows heâs been bullied too. However, I found it obvious that it was never solely about âfitting inâand itâs as their argument progresses and how it foreshadows her past in the Nina project that they make this pretty clear.
Sheâs confessing that she feels like she doesnât belong anywhere. Sheâs never had a family, not one thatâs ânormalâ and of her own. Hopper, someone closest to that, wasnât even there to give her that comfort at the time either. She had been isolated from the day she was born, and through the Nina Project plot line it is shown she was outcasted even in there. Despite being free from Brenner, her integration into society was unnatural if there was any at all. Sheâs had to stay hidden - isolated once again - from being hunted, chased, and claimed as this twisted psycho freak murderer. So, when finally given the chance to start over and live a ânormalâ life with a ânormalâ family who goes to a ânormalâ school where they make ânormalâ friends, she still finds herself outcasted once again. In a situation where she likely assumed wouldâve be the solution to her longing for belonging. Her feeling different is not solely because of being bullied, but it is the tip of the iceberg. If she canât even belong there, then where can she?
And to top it all off, she not only feels different but a monster. Not just to the bad men either, but to even her loved ones - to Mike. Sheâs reminded of what sheâs been through, what sheâs done, whatâs sheâs been forced to do, and what she has thought about doing to others for the sake of survival. But she also understands the implications of her actions. That to anyone else, she might as well be just that - a monster. Despite Mike trying to flip that thinking with the term âsuperheroâ, it doesnât comfort her because that is not what she needs to hear nor wants to be, especially now without her powers. Being referred to as supernatural reminds her that she is not natural in the slightest. Moreover, without the very powers that has granted her that name, she is left with the same question, is she still seen without them? Who is she when the mask is down? Can she ever be just Jane?
So no, Mike didnât get it, because although he has been outcasted and bullied before, thatâs all it was. He is still ânormalâ in the ways that matter - at least to el. He still has a life, friends, a family, a home. Even in season 4 the hellfire club can be considered a safe space he finds shelter to amongst the bullying, something el has just never had inherently and consistently. In that moment anyway, she feels like it has been proven time and time again that she is an anomaly in every way possible. It was a heartbreaking watch and I canât wait to see them expand on her character this season in relation to that scene.
Reclaiming the Self: Trauma, Autonomy, and Love in Stranger Things / Not Broken, But Wounded: Agency and Choice in Will Byersâ Story
This remarkable post by @hideaway311812 powerfully illuminates the fact that Willâs face-to-face confrontation with Vecnaâand the psychologically manipulative monologue Vecna delivers in order to weaken and corrupt himâdoes not exploit only Willâs homosexuality. It also weaponizes his status as a survivor of abuse: abuse inflicted both by Vecna himself and by the society that failed to protect him.
When Will ultimately activates his powers, it is not solely the result of self-acceptance as a queer individual, nor only the acceptance of his feelings for Mike. It is also an act of reclamation. Will reclaims his agency as a victim who lost control of his own body on the very night Vecna forced that vine into his mouth. This moment marks the return of autonomy to someone from whom it was violently taken.
As I discussed in my analysis of Vecnaâs speech to Will in episode 4, when Vecna shows Will a flashback meant to demonstrate that he âbroke so easily,â we are shown the scene in which Will speaks to Joyce after the Mind Flayer has entered him on the baseball field. It is no secret that this entire sequence functions as a powerful allegory for sexual assault, and Willâs words afterward mirror with devastating accuracy the emotional aftermath experienced by survivors.
âI tried. I tried to make it go away. But it got me, Mum. I felt it... everywhere. Everywhere. I... I still feel it. I just want it to be over.â
Anyone who lives with post-traumatic stress resulting from such abuseâparticularly when it occurs in childhoodâunderstands precisely what Will is describing. These words capture, with painful clarity, the torture of continuing to exist while carrying that trauma within oneâs body. Vecna deliberately uses this memory to reinforce his control, to convince Will that he has never truly belonged to himselfâthat his body and mind have been Vecnaâs since that night in November 1983.
Compounding this violation is the response of the world around Will. Upon his return, instead of receiving empathy or understanding, he is met with shame and ridiculeâbranded with the nickname âZombie Boy.â This is a disturbingly accurate reflection of how society so often treats survivors: by humiliating them, trivializing their pain, refusing to take them seriously, and ultimately pushing them to the margins. Before season 1, Will was bullied for being queer. By season 2, he is bullied for having survived.
This is precisely why the memories that brought Will back in season 2 are the very same memories that later allow him to activate his powers, reclaim control, and assert his agency. These three memories share something essential beyond love and joy:Â consent and agency.
Joyce recalls the Rainbow Ship Will drew. She explains that on his birthday, despite receiving numerous Star Wars toysâthen the ultimate trend for children his age, especially for a nerd like Willâhe chose instead to spend his time drawing, using every color from the box of crayons he had been given to create that Rainbow Ship. This was his choice. His desire took precedence over expectations, trends, and social norms. Will chose the simplicity of crayons to pursue his artistic passion rather than conforming to what was considered popular.
Jonathan speaks of building Castle Byers after Lonnie left. The day they created Willâs safe placeâhis space. A place with a password: without it, you were not allowed to enter, and even with it, you had to wait for Will to grant permission. Castle Byers is not merely a symbol of safety or childhood innocence; it is a symbol of Willâs boundaries being respected. The castle was conceived together, designed through Willâs sketches, and built collaboratively with Jonathan. It was a shared effort, born of mutual respectâbut ultimately, it was Willâs decision to build it with his brother.
And finally, there is Mike.
Mike saw Will alone on the swings. He approached himâand he asked. He asked if Will wanted to be friends. Will said yes. Their very first meetingâone that irrevocably changed both of their lives and grew into a bond that would become unbreakableâwas founded on the purest definition of consent. Will chose to say yes. It was his decision to allow Mike into his life. His consent.
The foundation of Will and Mikeâs relationshipâof their connection, their loyalty, and their loveâis consent itself.
Thus, Vecnaâs monologue directed at Will was not solely designed to wound him through his homosexuality or his love for Mike. It was also a deliberate attempt to reach the deepest layer of his suffering: that of a survivor still living with post-traumatic stress, a trauma that has shapedâbut does not defineâhis being.
However, what is often overlooked is that the resurfacing of Willâs childhood memoriesâthose moments of happiness anchored by his emotional pillarsâand Robinâs words were not meant only to guide him toward queer self-acceptance. They also served to remind Will of something essential: he is not what was done to him when he was twelve. He is not the trauma he endured, nor the pain that has followed him ever since. The very core of his identity is not rooted in violence or suffering; it is rooted in love, joy, and above all in autonomyâin his individuality as a person, in his capacity to choose, in his own desires, feelings, and emotions.
Will is not a consequence of what happened to him. He has always been that joyful, carefree, passionate, and loving child. He is not broken, as Vecna insists. He was woundedâdeeply, profoundlyâbut he is not broken. At his core, he remains the same boy he was before any of this occurred.
This is precisely why Mikeâs expression as he watches Will use his powers is so deeply revealing. It is not the look of someone who suddenly falls in love because the other appears powerful or impressive. It is a look of admiration, yesâbut above all, of pride. Mike is profoundly proud of Will in that exact moment. Not only because Will saves his life, but because Mike has watched Will grow since they were five years old. He has witnessed Will through his worst moments as well as his best. As the 8mm-style flashback so clearly illustrates, Mike has been by Willâs side their entire lives.
Mike has seen it all. He has seen Will doubt himself, cry, and likely suffer abuse at the hands of his father. He has seen him bullied at school and heard the townâs cruel whispers. He has watched Will endure torment and hell, carry trauma from season one onward, and slowly lose his light. He has seen Will terrified, shattered by fear, suffering agony before his eyes. He has seen his innocence and confidence fade. He has seen everything.
(Not for nothing if the cast and Duffers brothers insisted the audience to rewatch the season 2 before season 5 by the way)
And in this precise moment, Mike sees that same Will grow, bloom, awaken his powers, andâmost importantlyâtake control. What he also sees is that Will listened to him, and in doing so, proved that Mike was right to believe in him. Mike told Will that he was capable of regaining control over the visions caused by his connection to Vecna. And that is exactly what happens.
And this is not the first time this dynamic appears. This scene directly parallels the moment in season two when Mike tells Will that he can use the âNow Memoriesâ imposed on him by the Mind Flayer to spy on it in returnâand that is exactly what Will does immediately after that conversation with Mike. I previously wrote a post analyzing this parallel in more detail here, for those who may be interested.
Will struggled to believe it himselfâbut he listened to Mike. He chose to trust him, to internalize his words, and to act upon them. Once again, Will made a choice: to believe Mike and to accept that Mike believes in him. He accepted the confidence, the conviction, the potential, and the power that Mike sees within him.
This is no longer a matter of âWill needs Mike.â Will has finally understood that he does not need himâhe wants him. This is not necessity; it is choice. It is Willâs choice. Will does not need Mike to exist or to grow; he chooses to listen to him. He chooses to value Mikeâs perspective and words. It is not âI need Mike to become myself,â but rather, âI accept what you see in meâand that belief helps me rise even further.â
Will wants Mike to live, to be saved, to remain by his side. He does not need himâhe wants to be with him. Just as he never needed Mike to become his friend, but wanted him to be. This is not fate. It is not destiny. It is pure choiceâpure consent.
Exactly as they both chose, together, to be part of each otherâs lives.
This was never about fate or âsimply dumb luck.â They built this bond themselves. Mike asked Will if he wanted to be his friend. Will said yes. And from that moment on, they constructed their relationship through years of shared conversations, daily companionship, Dungeons & Dragons, laughter, drawing and writing together, mutual support, and the shared discovery of passionsâgames, films, music, art. They introduced each other to new interests, nurtured each otherâs curiosity, and grew side by side.
All of it was organic. Natural. Evident. And at every step, it was grounded in choice.
It has always been about consent and agencyânever about fate or destiny.
In the same way, Max and Lucas have always represented a matter of choice. Max chose to listen to Lucas. She chose to believe him and to take the risk. It was never about destiny or about what they were meant to do. Never. It has always been about wanting somethingâabout desiring it and choosing to reach for it.
It is also crucial to emphasize that the final image of episode 4âthe slow-motion shot that zooms in on Willâis quite literally Mikeâs point of view. In that moment, we are looking at Will through Mikeâs eyes. The audience becomes Mikeâs gaze. And Mike is profoundly, overwhelmingly proud of Will in that instant.
This is also precisely why that shot of Willâthe one framed through Mikeâs perspectiveâhas gone viral on TikTok and across the internet, and why so many people perceive Will as extraordinarily beautiful in that moment, as if he has undergone a âglow-up.â It is because we are seeing him the way Mike sees him. Mike sees him as beautiful. That is why the shot is in slow motion; why, despite the sweat, the dirt, and the tears, Will appears so striking and ethereal. It is because Mike perceives him that way. Will is, quite simply, perfect in Mikeâs eyes.
Mike is looking at him with loveânot because he suddenly falls in love in the moment Will saves his life, but because, after two and a half seasons without genuine access to Mikeâs point of view, we are finally granted it. For the first time since a long time, we are allowed to see how Mike sees Will. He has been deeply in love with Will for a long time, and in this moment he is so overwhelmed by emotion and pride toward the person he loves that the audience is invited to inhabit his perspective. And what we see, through that gaze, is nothing but beauty and perfection.
It is therefore no coincidence that so many heterosexual viewersâoften deeply blinded by heteronormativity and by a lack of media literacy, and who had never seriously considered the possibility that Mikeâs feelings for Will might be reciprocal because they had not engaged with the showâs subtextâreacted to this scene with humor and delight, interpreting it as a âturning point.â They joked that Mike was suddenly âturned on,â that he abruptly fell in love with Will because he had powers or because he looked attractive.
What they were responding to, however, was unmistakable: Mikeâs awe. His emotional overwhelm. His captivated gaze as he watches Will take controlâand, through that gaze, witnesses Will as beautiful. Even if their interpretation is flawedâmistaking a revelation of existing love for the sudden emergence of itâthey nonetheless cannot deny the presence of those feelings. Despite their heteronormative framing, the scene makes Mikeâs love visible in a way that is impossible to fully dismiss.
In the end, even through misinterpretation, the truth still surfaces.
Ultimately, Stranger Things does not frame Will Byersâ journey as a story of fate, destiny, or inevitable suffering. It frames it as a story of choice.
Vecnaâs attempt to break Will is not merely an attack on his queerness or on his love for Mike, but an effort to erase his autonomy by convincing him that he is nothing more than his traumaâthat his body, his mind, and his identity were permanently stolen from him in November 1983. Yet Willâs resistance does not come from denying what happened to him. It comes from remembering who he has always been beyond it.
The memories that empower Will are not random flashes of happiness; they are moments rooted in consent, agency, and self-determination. They remind him that his identity was never forged through violence, but through love, joy, creativity, and the freedom to choose. Will is not broken. He was wounded. And there is a profound difference between the two.
In reclaiming control over his visions and activating his powers, Will does more than fight Vecnaâhe reclaims ownership of himself. He chooses to believe in his own autonomy again. And in choosing to trust Mikeâs belief in him, Will does not become dependent; he affirms his strength. Mike does not complete Will. He sees him. He believes in him. And Will, in turn, chooses to accept that belief.
This is why the gaze matters. The slow-motion shot of Will in episode 4 is not about spectacle or powerâit is about being seen. Through Mikeâs eyes, we witness Will not as a victim, not as a survivor reduced to his pain, but as someone whole, radiant, and deeply loved. That love is not sudden, nor is it born of circumstance. It is the result of years of mutual choiceâof two boys who repeatedly chose to let each other in, to grow together, and to remain side by side.
Just as Max chose to listen to Lucas, and just as Will once chose to say yes to Mike on the playground, every defining moment in this narrative is rooted in consent. Not fate. Not destiny. Not obligation. Choice.
And that is the heart of Will Byersâ story: he is not the sum of what was done to him. He is the sum of what he continues to chooseâhimself, his agency, his love, and the life he actively claims as his own.
Flawless take top to bottom. As a Will Byers lover, this is the most beautifully written and most accurate explanation of his arc đŤâ¤ď¸
Mike was not uncomfortable because Will was flirting with him. YOU were uncomfortable because Will was flirting with him. There is a difference.
Obviously not directed at most of the people who are going to read this post but, seriously, so done with the projection and bigotry.

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credits to whoever posted this! i just found it in a tiktok comment section
This is it
A post about Nancy wheeler because I just have to get this out.
In my opinion I donât think Nancy has ever been male-centered, tied down, or sidelined because of the love triangle. To me, sheâs always been written and portrayed as a very strong, outspoken, ambitious, level-headed, and intelligent girl. Sheâs not only a leader for the teens but a fighter - always has been - and thatâs never been taken away from her even with constantly being in this love triangle. Sheâs not called Nancy Walk âem Down Wheeler for nothing. Most of the time sheâs not even worried about the boys, and if so sheâs either there to provide emotional support or clock their asses no in between. So when I see people say, âI never liked her because she seemed like a pick-me,â âsheâs so much more outside of Steve and Johnathan,â âSheâs been forgotten,â I get confused.
If anything, I would give those critiques to the boys. They seem to have been simplified to just âNancyâs boyfriend,â or âNancyâs love interestâ. I havenât seen much develop from either Steve or Johnathan since like season 3⌠and I think I can speak for everyone when I say their bickering over her just hurts their characters even more.
No matter what, Iâve always seen her as a great female character who just also happens to be dating Johnathan/is Steveâs love of his life (eye roll). Which fair because look at her. But maybe whole time that was just me idk. Although I do see some Stancy shippers finding themselves only shipping them for Steve because thatâs their favorite character and just use Nancy as a self-insert, in a general sense I think sheâs always been portrayed exceptionally and thus rewarding of the title, âfinal girlâ.
So Lucas and Dustin have been beaten and bruised
And Will has gone through his fair share of traumaâŚ
And youâre telling me little mike-i like girls-wheeler is making it out unscathed bar a scrape on his chin?
We have seen such little promotional material for Mike in volume 2âŚthe Duffers and Shawn Levy are calling it Finnâs best performanceâŚ
Iâm impatiently waiting for Mikeâs pov and and overall character development to come to the forefront vol 2
Mike is not Willâs Tammy!!
The minimization of Willâs feelings towards Mike and their relationship as a whole:
Iâm not here to argue whether Robinâs experience with Tammy is intended to mirror Willâs with Mike or not. This post isnât really meant to be Byler endgame focused either. However, rather Robin meant it that way or not, Mike will never be Willâs Tammy because she was Robinâs crush, Mike is not. Let me explain.
Robin describes Tammy as someone she quickly finds attraction to. Similar to âlove at first sightâ (infatuation), she explains how swept away she was the moment she laid eyes on her. Except, her attraction to her could be described as more of a crush than love. Inferring from her conversations with Will and Steve, it can be presumed that she didnât know her very well. She never mentions being friends with her, nor does she ever mention actually talking to her, only admiring her. She merely romanticized her, as someone with a crush does, and it is evident through her repeatedly mentioning how great of a singer she thought Tammy was when in reality she wasnât at all. Most of all, she assumed if Tammy liked her back, she would feel whole, and when she didnât, she crashed and lost herself entirely.
However, with Will, he has known Mike since the first day of kindergarten. They are each otherâs first best friend and arguably the closest. Mike has always been there for him, providing him open ears, understanding, protection, and comfort. Thatâs what makes him IN LOVE with Mike. He means so much to Will in ways Tammy could never be to Robin. He doesnât merely find him attractive and most importantly, he feels loved back. And it doesnât have to be romantic for it to give him strength. Itâs why despite Robin being alone in her video tape, his childhood memories with Mike are the first to play in his. Yes, Will feels like a mistake because of his sexuality, but it has nothing to do with Mike not returning his feelings. In fact, Mike makes him feel the opposite. He literally gives him âthe courage to fight onâ. Itâs about him being guilty and ashamed of himself, and THAT is what Robinâs speech was really about.
I really dislike the narrative that Robinâs speechâs purpose is to tell Will to move on due to its inclusion of Tammy because it regurgitates that Willâs feelings are simply a âsilly little gay crushâ he needs to âget overâ when it is so much more complex and tragic yet beautiful. Rather it is true or not, I do feel it does a disservice to Mike and Willâs relationship and his feelings for him.
For those specifically saying it is WEIRD to ship byler and want them to be canon, I want to remind yâall of this:
It is natural for us as the audience to want what Will wants because he is our main character !! This is stated by the Duffers themselves. So if Will wants Mike, it is actually expected for people to want Mike for Will too! No matter what obstacles come with this desire. Not only that, but in contrast to how tragically they paint his love for him in s4, Will is given hope mid Vol 1 of s5 by listing signals to look for and initiate himself. This gives the audience hope as well! It would be strange for the Duffers to continue having our main character in love with someone and feed them hope just to have it be deemed unrequited again.
In general I think unrequited love and slow burn rejection is just painful and heartbreaking to watch, especially as a queer person, even if they give him a âself acceptanceâ arc after. Itâs too often we find queer characters alone and having to just be okay by themselves while everyone else can be happy with their partner. Why canât we have both? However, I honestly wouldnât be too terribly crushed with Willâs self acceptance being tide with âgetting overâ Mike if they started it right after season 4, where it is most obvious Will has been indirectly rejected through Mikeâs profession to El. Yet, they continued to make Will hopelessly in love with Mike in episode 4 soâŚ

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@buck-yyyy MY FRIEND ON TIKTOK JUST SENT THIS TO ME
And now birthday gate is likely to be canon too. Weâre so winning.
oh and if i said mike believes so fully in willâs innate goodness that he never for a second could be scared of him⌠what then? if i said mike told will to his face that he is like vecna and then saw it happen before his eyes and he smiled the entire way through it because at the very core of his heart is the inherent immovable knowledge that will is good??? WHAT THEN
and if i said mike has constantly questioned elâs goodness TO HER FACE whenever she makes a mistake or doesnât do what he wants. since s1 he switched up on her so fast on her and screamed at her and yelled at her and told her she was fundamentally wrong to her core for acting human (âwhatâs WRONG with youâ). for being an endangered child. and heâs never changed. even in s3 it was el who was wrong, el who was conspiring and plotting against him, el who was a different SPECIES for being herself. i mean by god el hit her evil evil bully non fatally with a roller skate and mike âbullied my entire lifeâ âcalled a fag and a queer and a fairyâ âliterally jumped off a cliff because of bulliesâ wheeler told her that she was bad for it, that something was wrong with her. not just in the shock of the moment!! but for the ENTIRE REST OF THE DAY he made el, sweet kind traumatized el, believe that he thought she was a monster, that she WAS the monster, and he didnât apologize for it. and nothing he can say will change that because he can love her at her best but he has NEVER loved her at her worst.
meanwhile will is literally possessed by an interdimensional monster that, through him, kills dozens of soldiers and bob and endangers the entire party and THEN he becomes a vessel, a literal reincarnation of vecna⌠and mike cannot and has not and will NEVER say anything bad about him. instead: heâs a superspy. heâs a sorcerer. he is GOOD to his core
This is deep yet they still wonât understand